Latest news with #InProcess
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Riley Keough to Discuss New Series ‘In Process' in ‘Through Her Lens' Conversation at Tribeca Festival
Riley Keough and her creative partner Gina Gammell will sit down for a 'Through Her Lens' conversation, Tribeca Festival and Chanel announced on Thursday. Keough, a Chanel ambassador, and writer-director Gammell will discuss their new limited series In Process on June 6 at Metrograph, during the upcoming Tribeca Festival. Moderated by filmmaker, writer and producer Margaret Zhang, the discussion will explore the creative journey through exclusive clips shown from the series, which offer a look into the nature of female creativity and the artistic process. In Process was shot at Graceland and is focused on Keough — the eldest granddaughter of Elvis and Priscilla Presley — for part of the series. More from The Hollywood Reporter Who Topped the Met Gala Power Rankings? Spoiler: It Wasn't Rihanna or Zendaya Tribeca Festival Adds Slick Rick Visual Album, 'Twinless' New York Premiere Tribeca Festival Sets Storytelling Summit With Nia DaCosta, Leslye Headland, David Leitch, Lucy Liu and More (Exclusive) Founded in 2015, Through Her Lens: The Tribeca Chanel Women's Filmmaker Program provides ongoing support and mentorship to emerging filmmakers, fostering the next generation of creative voices in film. 'Riley and Gina are exactly what 'Through Her Lens' is about — women owning the frame and making damn sure they're not the last ones through the door,' said Jane Rosenthal, co-founder and CEO of Tribeca, said in a statement. 'Mentorship is more than advice — it's about showing what's possible and paving the way forward. That's at the core of Tribeca and Chanel's shared mission to drive lasting change in the industry.' The 'Through Her Lens Conversation: In Process' is free and open to the public. To register for future events, visit here. This year's Tribeca Festival kicks off on June 4 with the world premiere of Billy Joel: And So It Goes, a two-part HBO documentary, and will close with the Leonardo DiCaprio-produced Yanuni, directed by Richard Ladkani, on June 14. Miley Cyrus' Something Beautiful film, Mariska Hargitay's Jayne Mansfield documentary and the premiere of the live-action How to Train Your Dragon are also on the lineup. Best of The Hollywood Reporter From 'Lady in the Lake' to 'It Ends With Us': 29 New and Upcoming Book Adaptations in 2024 Meet the Superstars Who Glam Up Hollywood's A-List Rosie O'Donnell on Ellen, Madonna, Trump and 40 Years in the Queer Spotlight


CBC
02-05-2025
- Entertainment
- CBC
This painter is looking for meaning at the amusement park
Social Sharing Painter Philip Leonard Ocampo has always been obsessed with amusement parks. As a child, his siblings said he'd have "stars in his eyes" whenever they drove past a parking lot carnival. Just last year, the Toronto-based artist-curator went to Canada's Wonderland six times. "I really like roller coasters," he says, "because it's the closest I'm ever gonna get to flying." In a new body of work, Ocampo explores the amusement park as a strange, entertaining and beguiling "site of becoming" — the kind of place where you might form exciting new connections with yourself and others amid the promise of fun and fantasy. For CBC Arts' In Process, Ocampo invites viewers into his studio as he completes one of the final artworks — a gigantic ferris wheel combining painting and photography — for the spring exhibition Thrill Seekers (feat. Hannah Doucet) at 36 Claremont Project Space in Toronto. Watch the full episode below. Ocampo's paintings often include "seemingly miscellaneous objects in strange riddle-like configurations." Putting these articles — like board game pieces, tchotchkes and other recognizable items from the recent past — into a conversation, the images invite interpretation, much like tarot cards. "My work is a cross between magic and the nostalgic imaginary," he says. "How we remember time is really variable and kind of mysterious and non-linear. Nostalgia is a way to look critically back at the past, and also to make sense of it as someone who is feeling the effects of it and the spectre of it years after." The ferris wheel is an emblem of Ocampo's interest in time and nostalgia. It is a tremendous cycle, both beautiful and thrilling, that takes many people along for the ride.


CBC
06-03-2025
- Entertainment
- CBC
In a tiny studio, this artist prints portals to another world
Artist Khadijah Morley grew up with magic. The Toronto-based printmaker's dreamlike images of animals, silhouetted figures and portals to other worlds are inspired by the folk tales and stories of Afro-Caribbean spirituality told by her family. In the first episode of In Process, a new video series from CBC Arts, we visit Morley in her home studio as she completes a print for a solo exhibition at The Bows art gallery in Calgary. The exhibition, titled We've Met Before, is on view now through April 26. In Process takes the audience into the artist's workspace to see what some of Canada's most exciting talents are busy making. Each episode visits a different art maker as they work toward the completion of a new project. The series captures creativity in action, as the artwork — as well as the ideas that inform it — take shape in front of the camera. Watch the full episode below: With carving tools, printing blocks, inks and her press, Morley evokes the feelings and "atmospheres" of those formative stories she grew up with. The work has led her to question why some aspects of Afro-Caribbean spiritual practice, such as Obeah, have been maligned as "witchcraft," "superstition" or outright evil. "I think that I have to reassess as to why it's considered that way," she says. "It's very powerful. It's a form of embodied knowledge that I wish I knew more about.… I feel like I'm in the beginning stages of trying to understand where a lot of how I see the world comes from."